"Jumping" isn't really a thing with an amp like this, where all inputs go to the same tube. If you look at other amps where it's common to "jump" channels (e.g. 5F6, 5E3, JTM45, Plexi, see snippet below), they have separate channel inputs going to different triodes. Jumping them sends the input signal to two separate tubes whose output gets mixed further down the line. On a single channel amp like this, jumping the channels is impossible because there is no other channel.
Likewise you cannot have "normal" and "bright" inputs (at least in the traditional sense) because there is no bright channel, just the normal one.
In these two-channel amps, each channel has a "high" and "low" input. Plugging into the high (1) input, the low (2) input is shorted, so the signal sees both grid stoppers in parallel (34k) and a 1M grid leak. Plugging into the low (2) input, the high input is shorted, giving you a 68k grid stopper and a 68k grid leak, so the signal is attenuated by ~50%. This appears to be what you've done with your inputs 1 and 2, but none of this is the same as "jumping", where you would send your signal to a whole other channel of the amp to get additional gain in parallel with your first triode. This is not a possibility with the amp you have (unless you do something extreme like adding a tube/transistor or ditching the tremolo and using that tube for the second channel).